In a splendid concert Nov. 11 the Music Teachers Association of California, Sonoma County Chapter, presented their sixth annual benefit concert before 40 avid listeners in the Santa Rosa home of Helen Howard and Robert Yeats.
Highlights of the performances, involving eight musicians in various perf...

Returning to Weill Hall following a fire-related recital cancellation in 2017, pianist Peter Serkin programmed just three works in his Nov. 7 concert, three masterworks that challenged both artist and audience alike.
It needs to be said at the outset that Mr. Serkin takes a decidedly non-standard a...

Familiarity in chamber music often evokes warm appreciation, and it was thus Nov. 7 when the Chicago-based Lincoln Piano Trio made one of their many Sonoma County appearances, this time on the Spring Lake Village Classical Music Series.
Regularly presented by local impresario Robert Hayden, the Lin...

Before the Santa Rosa Symphony’s Nov. 4 performance of Leonard Bernstein’s “Symphonic Dances from West Side Story,” Symphony CEO Alan Silow took a moment to acknowledge the victims of the Pittsburgh synagogue attack and to observe that music offers a more peaceful and loving view of the world.
Mr. ...

When the ATOS Piano Trio planned their all-Russian touring program at their Berlin home base, it had a strong elegiac, even tragic theme that surely resonated with their Mill Valley Chamber Music Society audience Nov. 4 in Mill Valley.
Comprised of Annette von Hehn, violin; Thomas Hoppe, piano; and...

When the Berlin-based ATOS Piano Trio entered the cramped Occidental Performing Arts stage Nov. 3, the audience of 100 anticipated familiar works in the announced all-Russian program. What they got was a selection of rarely-plays trios, with a gamut of emotions.
Then one-movement Rachmaninoff G Mi...

Just two works were on the opening program of the Marin Symphony’s 67th season Oct. 28, Tchaikovsky’s iconic D Major Violin Concerto, and Shostakovich’s Tenth Symphony.
Before a full house in the Marin Center Auditorium conductor Alasdair Neale set a judicious opening tempo in the brief orchestra i...

The Venice Baroque Orchestra, a dozen superb musicians that include strings, harpsichord and recorder, played an uplifting concert Oct. 27 of mostly Vivaldi sinfonias and concertos. The Weill Hall audience of 600 had rapt attention throughout, and the playing was of the highest musical level. This r...

In somewhat of a surprise a sold out Schroeder Hall audience greeted pianist Steven Lin Oct. 21 in his local debut recital. Why a surprise? Because Mr. Lin was pretty much unknown in Northern California, and Schroeder is rarely, very rarely sold out for a single instrumentalist.
But no matter, and...

The strong connections between Santa Rosa’s musical community and California State University Chico were on display Oct. 12 as David Rothe, Professor Emeritus in the Chico Music Department, and Ayako Nakamura, trumpet with the North State Symphony, presented a concert titled “Heroic Music for Trumpe...

SNAZZY CLARINET-PIANO WORKS IN MILL VALLEY CHAMBER CONCERT

Often international-level instrumental duos are pickup couplings, one virtuoso’s schedule meeting another’s with the resulting desultory concerts. An exception would be the violinist Anne Sophie Mutter with her long-time partner Lambert Orkis, and the Nakamatsu-Manesse Duo.

The latter played a provocative concert Jan. 25 in the Mill Valley United Methodist Church, and the ten years of collaborative music-making of the two Jons was everywhere in evidence. Perhaps the recital’s major work was the E Flat Sonata of Brahms, Op. 120, No. 2. Here the playing was muscular and often loud in the Church’s diffuse acoustic ambience but it never deviated from the autumnal character of late Brahms. Mr. Nakamatsu’s phrasing with inner voices and subtle rubatos was admirable.

The scherzo was suitably impassioned and the finale (a set of variations) was taken at a fleet pace, the clarinet line rising and falling over the pedal point and solid underpinning of the piano line.

Massager’s frenzied Solo de Concours, a charming six-minute romp for clarinet, opened the recital and the Chopin Andante Spianato and Grande Polonaise, Op. 22, for solo piano, ended the first half. The first was played with delicious relish by Mr. Manasse, and the second with assured virtuosity by Mr. Nakamatsu. The Chopin has been a signature piece for the San Jose-based pianist, and was featured in his 2011 Santa Rosa recital and on recordings. Virtuosos in the past played the flowing Andante fast and the following Polonaise leisurely, but the pianist adopted the modern practice with a strolling pace (“spun out”) and a quick Polish dance ending. Mr. Nakamatsu gently teased the rhythms in the Polonaise and varied the speed of the few trills and repeats. Just before the final few bars there was spot at the top of a run where the last note was held in a bravura way with the sostenuto pedal. The effect of this and the final five repeated E-Flat notes brought a standing ovation from the 350 in the Church.

Mr. Manasse’s entertaining verbal comments preceded every work in the recital and he playfully called his partner ‘Mr. Nakamazing,” alluded to his past as a piano competition winner and high school teacher of German. The pianist took it all in stride and in the Poulenc Clarinet Sonata the Duo played the charming work from 1962 with aplomb. The Romanza was especially lovely with reflections of the composer’s earlier Les Soirées de Nazelles. The clarinet and pianissimo piano lines moved in perfect balance.

A set of three brief works spotlighting Mr. Manasse concluded the program, including his playing of Stravinsky’s Three Pieces for Clarinet Solo and Charles Goodwin’s Four Views of Clarinet and Piano from 2012. The Four Views is a busy work with syncopated questions and answers from the instruments, with lyrical Coplandesque motives popping in. In places the playing was in café music style and background movie music, turning in the final section to bouncy jazz motives.

The concert ended with another work written for the Duo, John Novacek’s Full Stride Ahead from “Four Rags for Two Jons.” The Duo has been playing this work for many seasons and gave the snazzy piano-voice interplay (from the iconic Ammons/Johnson bluesy stride style) a scintillating interpretation of high-level high jinks that predictably brought down the house.

An encore was demanded and the Duo responded with an arrangement of Gershwin’s I Got Rhythm from the 1930’s musical “Girl Crazy.” Mr. Manasse made a fetching display of squeaks and skips with the clarinet, along with several long glissandos from Mr. Nakamatsu. Clearly they were having a great deal of fun with the piece.

And so did the audience, including many that had heard the duo in the Mill Valley Chamber Series four years ago and who were seen asking the producers for a third appearance of this impeccable pair.